@article{oai:nagasaki-u.repo.nii.ac.jp:00005853, author = {Abdel-Hafeez, Ekhlas Hamed and Watanabe, Kanji and Kamei, Kaori and Kikuchi, Mihoko and Chen, Honggen and Daniel, Boamah and Yu, Chuanxin and Hirayama, Kenji}, issue = {4}, journal = {Tropical Medicine and Health}, month = {Oct}, note = {CLAWN miniature pig has been shown to serve as a suitable host for the experimental infection of Schistosoma japonicum. In this study, we found that radiation-attenuated cercaria (RAC) vaccine gave CLAWN miniature pigs protective immunity against subsequent challenge infection with S. japonicum cercaria. To characterize the protective immune response of the pig model vaccinated by attenuated cercaria, flow cytometric analysis of the reactive T cell subsets was performed. The intracellular interferon (IFN)-γ and the cell surface markers revealed the peripheral blood CD3+ T-lymphocytes produced significant amounts of IFN-γ during the immunization period and after the challenge infection. CD4+ αβ-T cells as well as CD4+/CD8αmid double positive and/or CD8αhigh αβ-T cells were the major IFN-γ-producing CD3+ T cells. On the contrary, γδ T cells did not produce intracellular IFN-γ. Our results suggested that RAC-vaccinated miniature pigs showed effective protective immunity through the activation of αβ T cells bearing antigen specific T-cell receptors but not through the activation of γδ T cells., Tropical Medicine and Health, 42(4), pp.155-162; 2014}, pages = {155--162}, title = {Pilot Study on Interferon-γ-producing T Cell Subsets after the Protective Vaccination with Radiation-attenuated Cercaria of Schistosoma japonicum in the Miniature Pig Model}, volume = {42}, year = {2014} }